Essential Memories: Latino Task Force Worker Sees The Difference Caring For The Community Can Make

News

San Francisco CA

09 April, 2021

4:43 PM

Description

By Clara-Sophia Daly, Mission Local April 9, 2021 Zair Gonzalez, 25, began working for the Latino Task Force in April 2020, just two weeks after it began giving out food and offering face-to-face social service resources. At first, Gonzalez' job was to bring food to people waiting in line, and help people get up to the second floor for social services appointments. Nowadays he splits his time between the Alabama Street location, and the new hub in the Excelsior. The woman who left an impression on him was an immigrant from Africa. She immigrated when she was young and was living by herself, Zair explained one afternoon at the Alabama site. He said the woman had less than a couple hundred dollars to her name, and was living in a room the size of the space underneath your bed, in a church somewhere in the Mission. "Her story really kind of got to me, and I really wanted to help. Fortunately, we were able to get her some money, hook her up with a solid food box, and eventually help her find work," he said. She didn't have a kitchen, so she could only take canned goods and fruit, which she could store and snack on. Hergratitude really struck Gonzalez. He said she took his and other essential workers at the hub's phone numbers, and has called them multiple times to thank them for their assistance. He's always happy to see her when she comes by for food every few weeks. "I was able to see a difference from a person being at their lowest, to being in a way better place. And being able to be a part of it was the cherry on top for me," he said. Mission Local covers San Francisco from the vantage point of the Mission, a neighborhood with all of the promise and problems of a major city. You can support Mission Local here.

By:  view source

Discussion

By posting you agree to the Terms and Privacy Policy.

/
Search this area